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Salons. Un éclairage sur la société par les revues savantes.

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At the beginning of the first chapter of this book, Ann McElroy includes a quote
from Inuit leader Jose Kusugak, who said, “Nunavut offers a lesson to the broader global
community. And that lesson is about the resilience of the human spirit.” Resilience in the
face of sociocultural, economic and other issues is indeed a core part of the Nunavut
experience, and McElroy’s book discusses such an idea through a cultural history of those
who call, or have called, home Canada’s most recent territory .

Using a mixture of oral history, geography and folklore to describe how Inuit
generations change over time, McElroy’s book is broad in its scope, diverse in its
targeted audience and accessible to people beyond the academy. People interested in
cultural geography, anthropology, folklore, religious studies and Canadian history would
reap the most benefit from the text, and the bibliographies following each chapter are
extensive and well organized, offering encouragement to look further into the material at
hand.

Consisting of eight chapters and a fieldnote-based epilogue, the history of the
Inuit in Nunavut starts by describing Nunavut’s rise to territorial status. The first
chapter, “Inuit and Astronauts,” successfully describes how Inuit culture is both rooted
in traditional lifeways and embraces both modern technology and lifestyles. McElroy
describes a Nunavut Day celebration, which includes Inuit country music and visits from
astronauts, as a way to frame the premise of her ethnography. She makes it clear that
personal experience is important and is widely incorporated in the book to describe how
Inuit deal with sociocultural and political issues in a way that blends together natural
landscape and cultures of multiple generations.

The notion of the authenticity of Inuit culture also plays an important role in the
text, especially in recognizing the fact that Inuit life has been heavily romanticized by
outsiders. In the second chapter, “Early Encounters,” European romanticism is brought to
the reader’s attention in a historical context. McElroy does an excellent job of
demonstrating that this romanticism is false; the Inuit lifeways were just as rooted in
tradition and variation as any other culture of their era, and embracing new things was
not always something detrimental. Such embracing carries on to the third chapter, “Dance
from the Heart,” which discusses Qallunaat
(European) influences on Inuit life with an emphasis on religion, health and authority.
Oral history describes how such interactions are met with both fondness and ambivalence,
and McElroy does not shy away from including the fact that there were issues with many
outside influences.

Up to this point in the text, there is little about McElroy’s personal experience in
the field, but this changes with the fourth chapter, “Living with the People.” Breaking
down her fieldwork experience chronologically, we learn of McElroy’s quest to understand
Inuit life from their perspective; the chapter is unromantic in describing the fact that
conditions were not always the best. An emphasis on relationships with the locals is also
brought to the reader’s attention; she saw the families she interacted with as mentors and
peers, bringing a personal touch to the ethnography. Such a focus on the individual voice
continues in the fifth chapter, “Becoming Townspeople,” as McElroy discusses change in the
eyes of Nunavut elders and in the memories of those who left their lifestyle to move to
towns such as Iqaluit (Frobisher Bay) and Cape Dorset. The relocations are not without
criticism, as claims of exploitation, forced family separations and removal from
traditional knowledge are demonstrated as being common.

Such a mix of Euro-Canadian and Inuit life resulted in a process of biculturation,
which is the core point of the sixth chapter, “Growing Up Biculturally.” Through examining
life cycles in chronological order, McElroy illustrates that almost all Inuit children
were born in a bicultural lifestyle; being born in Montreal or Ottawa (a process treated
as standard policy) seemed to frame life that way from the start.

McElroy explains the stages of life in a clear way, explaining social norms and
expectations while also emphasizing the adjustments to Euro-Canadian schools, social
groups and careers. Such adjustments were often part of relocation, the focus of the
seventh chapter, “Relocation and Loss.” Many Inuit families were forcibly removed from
their communities in the middle of the 20th century, and this has
resulted in a change in self-perception and the grieving process. Circumstances such as
illness, residential schooling and alcoholism all contributed to such perceptions, and
McElroy utilizes a mix of history and oral testimony to describe how such issues, among
others, were part of everyday life for many Nunavut residents.

Such issues led to discontentment among the Inuit, eventually leading them to
develop their own voice and movements; the eighth and final chapter, “Finding a Political
Voice,” describes how such a movement formed among the Inuit throughout Canada. Such a
voice was vital in the development of Nunavut as a territory, and McElroy utilizes a
history of Inuit efforts to contextualize how life in the newest territory is interpreted
by elders, who see natural landscapes and traditional lifeways as being important to
future generations. The culture is not seen as past, but living, and this is among the most important points of the book; identity is
rooted in a living traditional culture and will aid in shaping the territory’s
future.

Such a future is a part of McElroy’s epilogue, which consists of notes from a 2006
field session and discusses the rise of youth interest in Inuit lifeways. This rise,
combined with resiliency and the continuation of a syncretic culture, is a laudable way to
end this ethnography given the fact that the youth are the next generation who might, one
day, be the elders providing the testimony. This multi-generational perspective is one of
the greatest strengths of the book, demonstrating how all groups are vital to Nunavut
culture in unique and fascinating ways. With a focus on such a perspective, a grand
theoretical idea of Nunavut culture is unnecessary, and McElroy succeeds in making the
Inuit voice the most important voice for the reader to understand.